Category: Exhibitions

Margaret Dunn Crowley was a highly regarded and successful artist living and exhibiting in Perth in the 1950’s. She completed an art certificate course at Perth Technical College before moving to Melbourne and studying at the National Gallery Art School, William Dargie was the principal at the time.

Later she had tuition at Desiderius Orban’s studio in Sydney and would say of Orban that she learnt more from him than any other teacher.

For an artist, Western Australia was a difficult place to earn a living particularly from the sale of paintings, so Margaret worked as a colour consultant for Clarksons in the William Street branch during the day, and painted in a corner of her parents sleep out at night.

Her knowledge of colour coupled with her attractive appearance and pleasing personality caused Clarksons to use her image in their news paper advertisements of the time, where her colour consultant advisory services were available free of charge for the clients. Her status as a well known artist was another selling point used by her employer.

Well schooled in art and popular from the beginning the reviews of her exhibitions were mainly complimentary and encouraging. In one of the many articles referring to her work, the reviewer (generally Charles Hamilton) expected that she would rank among the leading painter’s of Australia. In another titled FEW WORKS OF MERIT, Lou Klepac wrote The best painting by a WA artist prize was won by Margaret Dunn with her “Native Flowers.” This is a remarkable still life in pale colours. Not often do we see a still life of such artistic strength executed by a woman. He then went on to say Apart from the winning entries little else can be called art.

In another review for the West Australian newspaper Charles Hamilton wrote… If you are one of those that saw Margaret Dunn’s last exhibition and felt hopeful of her future success you will find your hopes realized in her present show.

MARGARET DUNN CROWLEY – ESPERANCE CAMPSITE

Much was anticipated of her, but as a woman of the 50’s, home duties and raising children would take precedence over a meaningful career as an artist.

From 1949 to 1955 she exhibited every year in Perth and Sydney through group and solo exhibitions. She ceased showing her work from 1955 after marrying and moving to Sydney. She wrote in a small biographical catalogue – lived in Sydney and did not exhibit for many years because of family commitments.

Margaret remained in Sydney until 1983, exhibiting at John Ogburn’s Harrington Street Artist’s Co-operative from 1973 to 83 and Orban’s studio in 1970 – 71. Following a lengthy period of travelling and painting Australia she returned to Western Australia in 1988 to live and work.

This small selection of works from her travel diary of 1954 shows her skill and training as an artist and is satisfying to reintroduce an artist of her undoubted talents to a new audience.

Harald Vike is a household name among Australian art collectors. Born in Kordal, Norway on a family property, Vike grew up surrounded by nature and showed an infatuation with it from a young age. He would spend time walking in the great forests near his family farm observing and drawing, by the age of fourteen he was taking paints and canvases with him to the valleys to paint plein air. Although he had no formal knowledge of the style it is said that he simply enjoyed working while surrounded by nature.

It was at this age that Vike decided to leave school to work on the farm and to commit his spare time to painting and drawing, his parents refusing to pay for art classes, he learnt by copying the work of Norwegian landscape painters Hans Fresrik Gude and Johanna Christian Dahl.

By the age of 17 their small farm could no longer support the growing family and so Vike took to working on a whale-oil tanker. He travelled to islands in the South Atlantic Ocean, and then later, employed as a shark-shooter, he would work in French Equatorial Africa. It was during this work that he would develop his distinct style of figurative drawing taking sketches of the characters he met along his journeys.

Vike had travelled far and wide by the time he made it to Western Australia at the age of 21. He worked in the wheatbelt for a period of time before returning to Norway. Upon his return he met artist Hans Holman who convinced him to commit to fulltime painting. He decided to pursue this in Australia because he found the quality of light there fascinating.

HARALD VIKE – NORTHERN LANDSCAPE WITH ANT HILLS

He arrived in Perth in 1929 and soon became friends with Pitt Morison who had a strong influence on the development of his style. He would also become friends and work closely with Leith Angelo, Vlase Zanalis, and Herbert McClintock. He was part of the city’s first avant-garde scene.

Vike left Perth for Melbourne before WWII, struggling at first he was later introduced to Allan McCulloch who got him a job as a black and white illustrator for the Australian Post. Through McCulloch, Vike developed a friendship with Len Annois through whom he developed his water colouring skills. The three would paint together on weekends around Heidelberg and the Bucchas Marsh areas. Vike painted several significant canvases at Heidelberg.

Vike worked for many years in Melbourne as an artist before spending his later years between Adelaide, Brisbane, Tasmania and finally back to Perth where his paintings were regarded for their significance in the city’s art history. Vike died in Perth in 1987 aged 80 he was still working up until his sudden illness and death.

HARALD VIKE – DESERT WIND

His works have been sold on the Australian secondary (auction) market since 1973. Nearly 800 works have been offered with the mix between works on paper and paintings around 50% each. Top prices for Harald Vike works, including buyer’s premium, is $11,500 for a watercolour, $29,900 for an oil painting and $2,875 for a drawing. With a record of being traded in the secondary market for nearly 50 years Vike’s works are still very popular and his market position is assured.

We at GFL have been favoured with instructions to sell online a consignment of Harald Vike drawings. All of the works are related to his travels to the outback and show his exceptional drawing abilities. That Vincent Van Gogh was an inspiration to him is evident in many of these works as they are bold and purposeful in their execution, the artist has not held back or shown hesitancy.

As you might expect with an exhibition of small works, the opening of Precious and Littleon Sunday afternoon was a close up and personal affair. The weather held off for the course of the day and guests arrived at their leisure to enjoy a glass of wine and the works on offer.

Our online gallery fostered the first sale of the exhibition the night before the opening with cover piece, Martin Heine’s Flinders Lane Study No.6, selling to a client out of Melbourne.

The Rover Thomas, Sidney Nolan Portrait, Howard Taylor and Ellis Silas were quickly picked up by Perth collectors during the afternoon. And the Arthur Boyd sold later this week to a collector in Melbourne.

The response to the exhibition opening was positive and it has been a pleasure to exhibit these small works by great artists that often go unnoticed during our auction viewings. Our Nedlands gallery revealed to be the perfect space for the exhibition offering an intimate environment for the viewing of the collection of 30 works.

Many fine paintings are still available including pieces by Albert Tucker, Brett Whiteley, Robert Juniper, Mac Betts, John Beard, George Haynes, Nicholas Chevalier, Victor O’Connor and more.

Please join us again this Sunday afternoon from 2pm to view the exhibition or alternatively the gallery is open Tuesday-Friday 10am-5pmfor viewing. Exhibition closes Friday September 11.

Little pictures are often overlooked at auction as the larger and more dominant works can overwhelm the walls. Few realise that some of the most revered works in Australian art are no larger than 9 inches by 5 inches. These works formed part of the Australian impressionist exhibition held at the Buxton showrooms in Melbourne in 1889. The highest price at auction for one of these little paintings is around $490,000 set in 2009. That work was painted by Charles Conder and is considered to be one of the masterworks of Australian art. Little is precious, even in art.

While we don’t have any works from the 9 by 5 exhibition included in this catalogue we do have some interesting pieces painted from 1870 to 2010 starting with Oswald Brierley’s painting of HMS Galatea off Fort Macquarie and through to Martin Heine’s work of Flinders Lane in Melbourne.

Max Meldrum, Brett Whiteley and Albert Tucker among others are included. All are well recorded and delightful in their own individual way.

One of my earliest encounters with a work by Dorothy Braund was in a gallery in Melbourne when an oil painting of an energetic child in a high chair searching for an unknown fallen object that had fallen from its grasp to the floor. The picture was called Perpendicular with Curves and the child had struck a momentary pose that I had witnessed many times before with my own children – the contorted position of a yoga expert that only (without training) an infant can achieve.

I couldn’t help but be captured by the artist’s observation, sense of fun and ability to paint the subject in a manner that struck a chord with me.

Narrative cubism may be a good description of Dorothy Braund’s style yet it’s doubtful that she would like to be categorised – but then it may not bother her at all, as all of her painting life she has been pre occupied with the aesthetic, rather than the opinion of others around her.

2. Dorothy Braund – Motherhood

Following the introduction to her work and with minimum fuss an exhibition of her paintings in gouache was organised for 1997 in our old Nedlands gallery. The show was moderately successful to start with all the works selling over the following 12 months – some old through auction and others off the gallery wall with works often fetching higher price at auction than they were priced at exhibition. But that regularly happens when numerous people show interest.

Subsequent to the showing a cylinder without a return address was mailed to the gallery. The container had been addressed to me by goodness knows whom and my immediate thought was more advertising material as this was a ploy in common use at the time. So the tube was left aside for a while before it was opened.

Upon opening and to my surprise, rather than the promotional advice I was expecting , carefully rolled and doubly wrapped in tissue paper was an exquisite little still life in gouache by Dorothy Braund. There was an inscription on the reverse of the picture that said in part – “you did a good job and that you for your efforts.” It was Dorothy’s way of expressing her gratitude for holding the exhibition in Western Australia and introducing her work to a new and appreciative audience. There were no superlatives or unnecessary compliments just that brief inscription. The little picture with others by her is still in my collection today.

Dorothy Braund works in a manner similar to that inscription. She eliminates the non essential and is able to get the message across in a telling and personal manner.

13. Dorothy Braund – The Embrace

Fun runs, dinner parties, lovers embracing, families at play or rest, bikini girls and lifesavers, mothers and children, businessmen overweight or svelte, all have received her attention and been recorded in her distinctive style – no subject is taboo nor images of contemporary life ignored.

There is symmetry in her compositions and she has the extraordinary talent of making art that is appealing to people across all social groups and ages. The new can be just as enthralled by her work as the experienced and children can respond to her paintings as avidly as can grandparents and all generations between.

It has been 14 years since that first exhibition, though over the years many of her works have been sold through our rooms. Unfortunately Dorothy is no longer painting with any regularity and has entered into care. The guardians of her estate understanding her popularity and acceptance in the west allowed us to select a number of works from across the decades and bring them to you through this exhibition. It covers the period from the 1950’s to the 1990’s and includes many of her iconic themes in oil and gouache.

We at GFL are delighted to be involved again with the work of a unique and important artist who has an eye for essence and the ability to captivate all with her telling and elegant work.

EXHIBITION: 25th August 2011 until 6th September 2011

DOROTHY BRAUND: Born Melbourne 1926

STUDIES: National Gallery School Victoria 1945-49 under Alan Sumner; George Bell School 1949.

REFERENCE: Encyclopaedia of Australian Art, volumes 1, 2, 3 and 4; The George Bell School of Students Friends and Influences; Rennicks Australian Artists; Artists and Galleries of Australia; Artists and Galleries of Australia and New Zealand; Australian Watercolour Painters 1780-1980; Classical Modernism, The Bell Circle.

Painting for me is a passion that does not go away and I anticipate that the crosses and clouds that appear regularly in my landscapes will continue to do so for sometime to come. There is no symbolism attached to these emblems – they are everywhere in the landscape and painting landscapes is what I do.

In the past I have been much more figurative than I am currently and if I was to change direction, in all probability it would be back to my figurative style. It may happen though I doubt it, as the landscape still has so much to offer.

Over the years I have drawn upon my experiences in Nigeria, Morocco, North Africa & Southern Europe and since arriving to teach in WA in 1970, have replaced these experiences with traveling to the North West of Australia. A region that has constantly enthralled and surprised me – it has been the catalyst for much of my work, whilst living in Perth.

Mac Betts – Winter Caversham, 1996

Drawing has always been important as well, but for me it is not a constant necessity. There are periods where I often make numbers of drawings but mostly when traveling and my studio is not at hand. I have never been without my own studio, even when teaching.

My paintings are produced in the studio and I still enjoy the whole process of making them, working with oils, stretching and preparing my own canvases. I work for an hour or two each day, though currently there is a physical limit to what I can accomplish, as I am incapacitated through a recent motoring accident. Each brushstroke is a mental and physical dilemma as my restricted mobility forces me to plan each movement to get the effect I seek.

Mac Betts – Waroona, 1990

I have always had consideration for other work and artistic fashion, yet, do not feel artists currently in vogue have ever overly influenced me. Tapies, Bonnard, Matisse and de Stael I continue to admire but feel my own work has developed independently of their influence.

My creative energy is directly related to the barometric pressure. Today it is raining unremittingly and I can find no compulsion to paint whatsoever. If it were sunny and warm I should feel euphoric. I would feel the euphoric sense of well-being. It’s my 76th year and since I stopped teaching in the 80’s, I have had the wonderful privilege of painting for myself, spending my days reading and painting in a country environment and I hope to sustain this situation for the rest of my life.

If there’s a world record for the run down “The Mall” between Admiralty Arch and Backingham Palace, George Hayns probably holds it – at 3am on a summers morn, his borrowed motor bike (a Norton Dominator) hit a hundred miles per hour before he applied the breaks so the roundabout fronting the palace couldn’t claim him – “Breaking was the hard part,” he recalls. The year was 1962 and he was in London studying at the Chelsea School of Art.

1. George Haynes – First Studio Painting

That youthful act of bravura fits my opinion of Haynes’ attitude to painting – rules and laws are guides – if the need arises bend them. I’ve never shared this opinion with George and I’m uncertain how he would respond – but I know that he’s still having difficulty with his breaking.

During the mid 70’s following the closure of the Skinner Gallery, an auction of work by Contemporary Western Australian artists was held on a Saturday morning in the upstairs rooms of Gregsons the Auctioneers of Beaufort Street.

Gallery G the rooms were know as then, and local artists seeking to fill the void caused by Rose Skinner’s passing started it.

Haynes, Robert Juniper, David Gregson and a few others had entered works for sale – Interest was minimal and there were probably more sellers at the auction than buyers. Some of Haynes’ pictures were bid to as little as $50 that day and other painters didn’t fare any better either. Gallery G closed soon after, for reasons related to staffing.

George’s pictures came to my notice at that viewing. While I could readily identify work by others, his were different. There didn’t seem to be a common thread. No two pictures appeared the same, and I was continually referring to the gestetnered catalogue to discover whose work it was – time and time again the name George Haynes appeared.

17. George Haynes – The Road to Damascus

Landscapes, nudes, street scenes, still life, interiors and abstract – all by him were packed into that room. His colour was unique and used in a non-conventional (to me) manner. Blue trees, red water, green nudes and purple chairs were the norm and occasionally there would be a small traditional landscape, just to add to the mix.

It was a tough sale and the auctioneer became a bit fractious, as piece after piece was reffered. And not being confident inmy judgement, the urge to acquire was quashed – so I left the auction Haynesless and a few others less as well. It was a day when a thousand dollars would have bought a lot and some major pieces could be had for a trifle – but the eye was new, the atmosphere dark, so the opportunity passed by.

The next time I saw Haynes work in volume, was again at auction – it was early 80’s and the PIFT theatre in Fremantle was the venue.

George was building a new studio and he had to sell some pictures to pay for it.

Auctions like these can often be the source of bargains and as confidence in my judgement was no longer an issue – to inspect those on offer was a must – I wasn’t going to let the opportunity pass me by again.

Dazzling reds, subtle violet, luminous greens and glaring yellows were all there – blue nudes, green houses, pink boats and though the palette had a post impressionism feel, the texture didn’t – the images weren’t obviously distorted either, and all communal tastes seemed catered for. I circled at least twenty that I wanted.

Audience awareness was poles apart to the Gallery G experience. The viewing was strong and the interest was genuine.

George was present, talking, listening and explaining – I was amused by the artiness of it all.

14. George Haynes – Jean Hebutine

Wine was plentiful but glasses were not and the waiters were sipping more than they were serving.

It was an enjoyable and different way to spend a Sunday afternoon in Perth in the 80’s – quite bohemian it seemed.

By the time the auction was due to start, the room was packed to standing room only. Bob Gregson was in charge, and before he commenced, a young lady in an interesting costume slithered out front and performed an exotic dance that was greeted politely in some areas, and enthusiastically in others – such was the diversity of the audience.

George’s friends were buoyant throughout though – and the noise from that corner became louder and louder as the day progressed. It all added to the atmosphere and probably explained the shortage of wine glasses.

From the beginning, bedding was brisk and some solid prices were paid. I waved my hand at everything I wanted and not till near the end was I able to land one – a little (almost) mono chromatic oil on panel titled Reabold Hill – it was unsigned, but that didn’t matter as the artist was to hand – I was doubly pleased as my Sunday hadn’t been a waste and I thought I’d secured one of the bargains of the day.

I was introduced to George following the auction and asked if he would sign the work “How much did you pay?” he inquired, “Two Hundred” I replied. “I could have sold that to Heindrick for four hundred” he said, “He wanted to buy it just recently and I didn’t want to sell.” He remonstrated with himself; mumbled something inaudible and signed the picture on the reverse. I never discovered who Heindrick was. I think I was supposed to know.

22. George Haynes – Songs Without Words v

Twenty years passed before I met George again, though I kept in touch with his work through his retrospective, numerous exhibitions, auctions and ownership.

I have come to understand that George is a painter – often a sculptor and more recently an etcher.

He receives ideas from wherever he travels – understands the craft of his art – doesn’t create to satisfy market demand – is baffled at the correlation between title and saleability – has a strong work ethic and will not let an unresolved piece leave the studio.

George proclaims himself as the sole member world wide of the Illuminism Group of artists.

One maybe two hundred pictures pass me by every week, and whenever I see an interesting work in a semi-familiar manner I always ask for details of the author – invariably the reply is George Haynes – something different again – why do I continue to be surprised?

“All Art Aspires To The Condition of Music” is a Delphic phrase that I aspire to translate, to decipher.

As a painter I know that nothing can move one so pungently as music – and as I aspire to achieve something of that condition.

For me that something is in colour, and to explain what I mean, I will have to go back a bit.

For years and years I earned my living teaching and painting plein-air landscapes, and it is the landscape that has shaped my ideas on colour. As I say to the students, “When you are wondering how to mix up that colour, ask yourself first What tone is it – how light or dark? What is the warmth of the colour (how much yellow, how much blue)? And finally What colour is it? – oxide of chrome green with a touch of Mars violet maybe? Without the first two criteria being correct the colour will probably jump and jar. But on the other hand if you want to paint yon green tree red, if you get the tone spot on, and the temperature right, there is a good chance it might just work.”

For me this approach liberated colour. One can paint yon cottage and tractor shed in pink and grey or, if you so choose, ochre and violet, if the tones and temperatures are right they will cohere, but have a vastly different emotional charge. Ones colours may be loud bright and clear – Luxe et Volupte (primary blue and yellow maybe) Or melancholy (how sombre is indigo with umber) All moods are expressible with different colour combinations. In fact I think the pleasure of seeing colours reacting to one and other is very similar to the aural pleasure one can get from juxtaposed sounds.

Then there is the application-this is how the colours meet one another. Van Gogh’s percussive chunky brush strokes mean something quite different to the soft edges, the glissando of wipe-it-again-Sam (Fullbrook) even though the colours may be the same.

Then there is the composition – how to hold all this together on a rectangle etc.

But that is enough for the moment.

All these factors take time. There is so much balancing of tone, temperature and chroma, that at the very least (my personal record) a month to complete a picture. I enjoy the slog of these paintings, it allows me to pack a lot into them. Because of my slow production, I have to sell paintings as I go and this show at GFL contains a lot of work that has been sold over the last few years.

This is my first show in a public gallery after an absence of eight years. It has been so long that I am occasionally asked “Are you still painting?”

To those who don’t tickle the belly of the Australian public in search of popularity, success and importance in their field doesn’t always equate to financial safety.

Most of the work produced by the major non-figurative painters of the 50’s and 60’s was vilified in its time and continues to be overlooked by today’s art buying public. Many of those late career artists are still searching for an appreciation of their work that extends beyond that of the art institutions.

In the 1950’s abstract or non – conventional painting was an easy target for derision in Australia, and the public was encouraged to resist the international trends that were attracting the younger generations of painters.

As a response to abstraction, the Antipodean Manifesto was composed and the figurative was defiled as opposed to the abstract that was treated with misgiving.

The signatories to the Antipodean Manifesto became celebrated, as the art buying public rallied to the cause. They included Arthur and David Boyd, John Brack, Charles Blackman, Robert Dickerson, Clifton Pugh and John Perceval. It seemed that Australia should be a bastion of all that was perceived as wholesome in art and the new was to be treated as an aberration.

Abstraction was xenophobic to those that should have known better and in hindsight it could be claimed that the manifesto was a simply brilliant 1950’s marketing tool that is still in effect today. Lynn observed that it was the only conservative manifesto in history and it was an aggravation to he, John Coburn and others interested in the international trends.

From the 50’s through to the late 80’s, support for the abstractionist rarely extended beyond the institutions, so most of the bread winners influenced by international art trend had to seek alternate careers to provide for themselves and family.

6. Elwyn Lynn – Delta 1963

Elwyn Lynn was from that generation and from that group of artists. In his early career his work was figurative and relatively conventional with a modernistic palette, but from the late 1950’s and onward, his direction altered and he was considered to be Australia’s foremost exponent of texture painting.

His images became abstract and his use of colour restrained. He was one of those artists that was nudging Australia into internationalism and outside of the institutions, Lynn’s work was not popular and received scant understanding.

Writer, teacher, administrator and critic are just a few of the hats that he wore during his long and outstanding career. When he wasn’t busy in those pursuits he was constantly satisfying his appetite for literature, devowering works by the world’s great writers, as well as the contents of any art publications that satisfied his need. Lynn was credited with an encyclopaedic knowledge of 20th century art.

He served as the chair of the Visual Arts Board of the Australia Council and at different times performed the talk of art critic for the Bulletin, the Weekend Australian and the Sunday Mirror. He was curator of the Power Gallery of Contemporary Art for fourteen years and edited some of Australia’s more influential arts magazines including Art and Australia Quadrant.

22. Elwyn Lynn – Mining 1982

For his services to the visual arts he received many accolades and was made a member of the Order of Australia in 1975. He was also awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Letters from the University of Sydney in 1989 and an Emeritus award from the Australian Council in 1994.

As an artist the Art Gallery of New South Wales, holding a retrospective exhibition of his work in 1991 acknowledged his importance. He was awarded the Wynne Prize for Landscape painting in 1988, The Blake Prize in 1957, The Robin Hood Prize in 1961, The Trustees Watercolour Prize of the AGNSW in 1980 and 1983 and the University of NSW Purchase Prize in 1987. His biographical details are included in the standard reference books related to Australian art, and his work is included in the holdings of every major collecting institution throughout Australia.

Elwyn Lynn was one of the few people that was able to combine a successful career as an arts administrator without losing status as an important artist. And while it was the administrative career that provided for the family, it is through his art that his influence continues as he maintains a dialogue with this generation and those that will follow.

He has left for us many images, some with titles that puzzle and give us cause to engage the intellect and others that do not challenge at all. And even if we are unable to solve the riddle of the name, we can always feel comfortable in the presence of a solid inspirational work that contains a spirit, which only major artists can invoke.

11. Elwyn Lynn – Oval Altar 1968

We at GFL are pleased to present this exhibition of Elwyn Lynn’s work. It is history on display and the first time such a comprehensive collection has been seen in Western Australia since the Skinner Gallery show of 1971.

Exhibition from Friday 16th September until Friday 23rd September 2005

“After sunset twas a silver ocean tonight. All people have to wait for the tram & I came down slowly in the dusk & close to me watching also was a little girl about 10, sitting on the sand. So still. I stood awhile thinking of her and the great spread of water. And I felt very much inclined to take this dear little creature in my arms and kiss her, sit down next to her. So innocent & who may some day become a fine woman. She may be powerful like this broad water some day. I watched with happy interest all this delight that men can’t sell to you – she got up fastened on her boots & went slowly after the other people. I watched her affectionately & then then the large pale moon on the rollers – Oh what a lot we enjoy & how good everything is. -The tram full of women and children, onle little boy on my knee. Workmen in the smoko two convent women also.” (Arthur Streeton in a letter to Tom Roberts c. April 1890. Letters from Smike, edited by Ann Galbally and Anne Gray, published by Oxford University Press Australia).

If Sir Arthur Streeton had sent this letter today, he would probably recieve a visit from the authorities and have his details recorded on some international database as a person of doubtful character. Today, society would probably look upon these thought as those of a disturbed person with unhealthy tendencies. But nothing could be further from the truth. This extract from Streeton’s letter was composed in an Australia that had values and beliefs vastly different to the one we know today.

If we were to generalise we could say that in Streeton’s times society seemed to focus more upon responsibility of the individual as opposed to the rights of the individual. Those times seemed to be more innocent than those of today. But the same couldn’t be said of the art that was made. It was built on centuries of tradition, hence the tag traditional that applies to much of it now. The art from Streeton’s era was steeped in craft. Discipline was important and individuality was restricted until the academic education was completed. And even though some may have exhibited an extraordinary talent, that talent was restrained during the instructive years and encouraged to develop in the privacy of the working artist’s studio.

9. Arthur Ernest Streeton (1867-1937) – Corfe Castle

These works are direct and are easy to understand and the artist’s skill is on show to be admired and envied. Contrary to much of the work made today the pictures on show in the Masterworks of Yesteryear exhibition do not require the services of an interpreter to convince us of their greatness, as the artist viewed that as his responsibility. And even though much contemporary criticism in Australia treats the art from this era as passé, it is our right to disagree with that opinion and enjoy these works for the quality they exhibit.

Today there is a tendency to ignore the craft of art and to reduce the instructive period. There is a tendency to rush into the market placewith something new and differenjt, no matter how bizarre. Dicipline, hard work and endeavour seem to have been replaced by fad, opportunity and urgency, doused with a liberal quantity of promotion. There seems to be more self taught artists practising now than there are that have been academically trained and one wonders which of today’s practitioners will stand the test of time.

All of the artists included in this exhibition have stood the test of time, and feature prominently in the standard reference material related to the history of Australian art. Each of the artists is represented by a significant work that is well crafted and exhibits the individuality for which they achieved their place in history.